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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a cage with a" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when describing a cage that contains or is associated with something specific, such as an animal or an object.
Example: "The zoo had a cage with a majestic eagle perched on a branch."
Alternatives: "a cage containing a" or "a cage housing a".
Exact(60)
We went walking down by the river and we came to a cage with a bird.
Under a window was a cage with a hamster named Sniffers.
"It was like we were parrots in a cage with a cloth over it," Rice-Davies recalls.
He gave lectures that lasted 12 hours and once spent a week living in a cage with a wild coyote.
Mr Rondeli notes of Russia that "we are in a cage with a cruel dog who is biting us.
It still felt, Rubin has said, "like being in a cage with a lion, keeping them calm", but the results, they agree, were worth it.
That day, the painter drew a group of five dogs beside a cage with a cat, a grand piano viewed from above, and a stern young lady.
The fact that they've survived in a cage with a wild animal for five years means more than some green stamp by another NGO.
So now he thinks she's like some tame thing in a cage — with a wild creature waiting to get her as soon as she's released.
Afterward an attendant wraps Zoey in a clean towel and returns her to a cage with a private door flap leading into the yard.
"When you make a cage with a man inside and a polar bear attacks it, that is a disturbance," Mr Alfheim said.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com